Facebook announced Wednesday that it is reimagining its Creator Studio tool as a standalone AI companion app designed to help creators grow their audiences on the social network.
By giving creators access to this AI companion app, Meta hopes to keep creators active on Facebook to compete with rivals like TikTok and YouTube for attention. The company also hopes the app will eliminate the need for creators to rely on third-party tools like ChatGPT to brainstorm content ideas and analyze performance.
The new app, which is currently being tested with some creators, will incorporate Facebook’s recently announced AI creator assistant. The Assistant provides personalized recommendations to creators based on content style, performance, audience engagement, and goals.

Creators often need to scrutinize charts and dashboards to understand their performance, but with an AI assistant, they can quickly get answers to questions like “When should I post?” “What are people saying in my comments?” Because the AI assistant is conversational, you can also ask follow-up questions, such as how your audience has changed over time.
In addition to the built-in AI assistant, the Creator Studio app includes several new features, including an AI-powered commenting tool that helps creators draft their most important comments and replies in their own voice. Facebook says creators can edit and approve draft responses before posting them.
When creators open the app each day, they see a feed of their priorities for the day, including reviewing the performance of their latest posts, tracking their progress towards their goals, and flagging comments that need a response.

Wednesday’s announcement adds to Meta’s recent wave of app releases. Last month, the company rolled out a standalone app for Facebook groups called Forum, which functions similarly to Reddit. In April, Meta released a new app called Instant that allows users to share their disappeared photos with their Instagram friends.
The pipeline continues to grow. The New York Times reported Tuesday that Meta is internally developing its own Polymarket-like app called Arena, but it has not yet launched.
The rhythm is intentional. The Wall Street Journal reported in April that CEO Mark Zuckerberg told employees that AI-driven efficiencies would allow the company to build more apps than ever before.
If you buy through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. This does not affect editorial independence.
